| t byfield on 14 Mar 2001 23:17:16 -0000 |
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| [Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> Armor, Amour |
crandall@blast.org (Wed 03/14/01 at 12:29 PM -0500):
[one paragraph omitted]
> The rising figure of a defense shield - a prophylactic for the entire
> country - marks a shift in the architecture of combat.
this is nice-sounding theory, but it's not really accurate.
as is well known, the national anti-ballistic missile (ABM) defense
system bush is pushing for is a zombie process that is now a few dec-
ades old: surely the names 'strategic defense initiative' and 'star
wars' are familiar to you from the early 80s. specifically:
President Reagan's speech of March 23, 1983, renewed a
national debate that had been intense since the late
1960s but much subdued since 1972 [i.e., when the ABM
treaty resulting from the SALT I talks was signed].
Wouldn't the United States be more secure attempting
to defend its national territory against ballistic mis-
siles while the Soviet Union did the same? Or would it
be more secure attempting to keep such defenses largely
banned by agreement with the Soviet Union?
that's the opening of the 'Executive Summary' of the US Office of
Technology Assessment's September 1985 _Strategic Defenses: Bal-
listic Missile Technologies, Anti-Satellite Weapons, Countermeas-
ures, and Arms Control_. i quote it and cite the title in detail
to give a vague indication of just how many interrelated issues
and perspective were involved in what you describe monolithically
as 'the architecture of combat.'
> As the national
> discourse changes its orientation from that of targeting to that of being
> targeted,
but in the paragraph i omitted above, you cited _Dr. Strangelove_
(now is nearly *forty* years old), whose entire logic assumes that
this reductive target/be-targeted framework was long since obsole-
scent. how does the 'perspective' of the movie's Doomsday Device
fit into your theory?
> new visual formats arise alongside the antiseptic videogame
> images of the recent past: formats in which our status as viewers is
> reversed and our positions imperiled. Another effect of the
> perspectivization that is warfare. With America's obsession for safety
> reaching epidemic levels - fueled by the market's need to provoke interest
> in new technologies and the military's need to justify increased defense
> spending - a near-religious fervor for "protection" could well arise, as
> missiles appear to be potentially falling down on us from the skies.
US military budgets have been going up for the last 65 years.
you could, of course, cite something like the very excellent video
game Asteroids as a cynical/compulsive proto-manifestation of what
would soon (well, 15+ years later) become a national asteroid ob-
session--prompted, in part, by a series of half-witted attempts by
various USG officials (for example, dan quayle) to justify SDI as
an anti-asteroid protection. the 'method' of such an argument seems
much like the approach underpinning this essay, but it would turn
the theory you've presented upside-down.
[~two paragraphs omitted]
cheers,
t
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